A note on source materials for the biographies of Southeast Asian `ulama

DSpace/Manakin Repository

A note on source materials for the biographies of Southeast Asian `ulama

Bruinessen, M.M. van

(1997) Utrecht University Repository

(Article)

Abstract

The study of the history of Islamic thought and the social organisation of
learning in Southeast Asia is rendered more difficult by the dearth of
easily accessible sources and the absence, until very recently, of
biographical dictionaries of `ulamâ this region such as we have for most
other parts of the Muslim world. We ... read more are relatively well informed about a
dozen or two of prominent `ulamâ (mostly Sufi authors or, in this century,
political leaders), but the thousands of others who have played influential
roles remain very much in the shadow. As more and more Javanese and
Malay manuscripts are being edited or summarily translated, interesting
bits and pieces of information on individual `ulamâ and their roles are
coming to light, and prudent use of the VOC archives may also yield
valuable information, but for the time being we still have a very poor
insight in who, before the end of the 19th century, the `ulamâ of Southeast
Asia were, what sort of family backgrounds they had, how and what they
studied, and what their relations with the courts and with village society
were. For the late 19th and 20th century, it is easier to find information on
not only the most prominent `ulamâ but also those of the second echelon.
Especially during the past two decades, numerous biographies of `ulamâ of this period have been compiled and published, though not always easily
accessible. The aim of this communication is to draw the attention of
colleagues to source materials that are at present available. show less